Erick, 
So is the story we heard about the sun continuing to cure the gel correct?
Lynnette

Sent from my T-Mobile myTouch 3G Slide

----- Reply message -----
From: "Erick Westcott" <er...@gelousy.com>
Date: Tue, Jan 24, 2012 2:43 pm
Subject: NailTech:: Overcuring gel questions
To: <nailtech@googlegroups.com>

Well, It isn't really sticky layer either, but sticky layer is a quick easy
way to explain it.  Why complicate things, when sticky layer says exactly
what it is.

 

If you really want to be correct, dispersion layer would indicate that
something was being dispersed or being distributed.  I imagine that you
could make the stretch to say that the sticky layer was covering the entire
nail therefore it was dispersed over the entire nail.  But to disperse would
assume that something or someone needed to disperse it in the first place.
You do disperse the product over the nail, but the curing process does not
disperse the sticky layer, it does not put it there.  It was there from the
beginning.

 

If anything the correct term would be inhibition layer.  The oxygen
molecules in the air inhibit the very top layer of gel from curing.

 

Given enough time and exposure to UV, that sticky layer starts to cure, then
you get a gummy really sticky layer that when wiped looks dull.

 

Given even more time and exposure to UV, some gel will yellow and become
brittle, like when you kick a piece of plastic that has been out in the sun
for years and it just falls apart.  But nails becoming brittle due to over
exposure of UV is rare, it takes a lot of photo aging to make that happen.

 

I don't think that was too personally bias.

 

I think the "change" came about because the chemists were in the closet so
to speak.  So there were people just running around making things up like,
"you can't over cure gel", "Polycrylic", "dispersion layer", "acrylics will
be gone in 10 years", "gel  cures cancer and tastes like strawberries".  But
now that some have come out, there is a constant battle between what was
said and what is correct.  Even today there are people that say things that
simply aren't correct, or they blow things so out of proportion that it is
just silly.  Seven things you MUST do in the next 10 minutes or you will die
a horrible death in the coming zombie apocalypse.  More after the break.

 

And that is why I stick to sticky layer.

 

Erick Westcott, CEO

Gelousy Gel Nail Systems

1745 W Deer Valley RD STE 124

Phoenix AZ  85027

602-493-9043

Fax: 602-493-2544

er...@gelousy.com

www.gelousy.com

 

 

 

From: nailtech@googlegroups.com [mailto:nailtech@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
Of Manicures That Last
Sent: Thursday, January 19, 2012 12:48 PM
To: nailtech@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: NailTech:: Overcuring gel questions

 

Thank you Erick, apparently you have earned the title Chem-Geek for a good
reason !
I know I use the term dispersion layer ALL the time. I will absolutely stop
that and use the correct Sticky Reside term!

Lorraine


At 09:15 PM 1/18/2012, you wrote:



Oh I forgot...  How over curing happens.

The sticky residue (and it is NOT called a dispersion layer) starts to cure
causing dullness when the nail is wiped. With no residue gels, over curing
causes brittleness.

-Erick
Gelousy Chemist and general bad ass.

-------- Original Message --------

Subject: NailTech:: Overcuring gel questions

From: Maggie in Visalia <onykoph...@yahoo.com>

Date: Wed, January 18, 2012 6:50 pm

To: 1Nail Tech list < nailtech@googlegroups.com
<mailto:nailtech@googlegroups.com> >

Ok, I need a chem-geek.

 

I'm sure it comes as no surprise to anyone who's known me (or known of me)
for any length of time, but I'm skeptical of pretty much any information
that comes down the pike these days on the subject of product chemistry.

 

A. I have to take into consideration that the experts on the subject also
all represent companies and products that they depend on for their
livelihood, not to mention are personall invested in-- I'm sure Doug Schoon
thinks of Shellac as his personal baby, for example. So I can't think of any
source of info on these matters that doesn't come with personal bias.

 

B. Everything they used to tell us has changed in the last 20 years that
I've been listening! Seriously, I remember being told that you could NOT
overcure gel! That once all the polymer chains were formed, they were done.
So continued exposure to UV light wasn't going to do anything else.

 

It's not that I can't understand that technology changes. That maybe the gel
technology that's primarily used in the industry today isn't the same as it
used to be. I'm totally cool with that-- I just want someone to acknowledge
that it changed. When did anyone say, "Well, it used to be like this, see?
But now we use this instead and so we have these issues now...?"

 

Ok. So anyway.... The current word is that gel CAN be over-cured. If anyone
would care to explain to me HOW over-curing takes place, I am ALL ABOUT
learning!

 

Just a day or two ago, I came across a post from Manicures That Last about
over-curing and the example was given that you don't really need to worry
about over-curing until you get into 5 minute+ range.

 

Ummmmm..... so, what happens if a nail chips? or breaks? or peels off? 

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"NailTech" group.
To post to this group, send email to nailtech@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
nailtech+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/nailtech?hl=en.

Reply via email to